Newspapers / The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.) / Dec. 20, 1958, edition 1 / Page 2
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2 THE CAKOUNIAH WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, DECEMBER 20, 195 R Shaw Univ. Designated As Teacher Test Center For Feb. Shr.lv University has been desig nated 'as a testing center for the 3959 nationwide administration of t k* National Teacher Examinations next February, Dr. W. R. Strass jivr, president announced today College seniors preparing to teach and teachers applying for positions in school systems which encourage or require applicants to submit their scores on the National Teacher Examinations along with their other credentials are eligible in take the tests. The examina tions arc prepared and admi nistered annually by educa tional Testing Service. Trlnce ton. New Jersey. The designation of Shaw Univer Ligon Teacher, Student Given High Positions In The NCASC DuiiOri the eighth annual con vention of the North Carolina As toria m of Student Councils held jit Dt' rd High, Goldsboro. Decem ber 10-12, Hampton Haywood, a junior at Ligon High, was elected state p c-idcnl. Mrs. Thelma T. Dalny, student counselor at Ligon. formerly holding the position of assistant executive secretary, was elected executive secretary. Other officers elected were Reg inald Durante of West Charlotte, vier-pvr ideot: Ozzie Faison. .1 T. Bari r. second vice-president: Ma ,-v V id Williston High. s**cre 1, I-,*; ?.t:.xin: ;MUr ry, J- T. B&r --lrv t -'.-U vv. rn , sC th s rumdolnr.. for* »• , v-f-iitive secretary. became , .... ~ ■; ■* ny emritns. Other •fni'"i’ ,y novii-uis ru < 7,1 st Anr.C p Lincoln Heights. North V ... ~ ~ asristant executive j , .. • , : N i'-ory com mil tee. Ml'S, j , >.- Rocky Mount t ii! C \KOMNI AN v > , .!),< the Carolines' Fiild - bed Sj the Carolinian Publishing Company sih East Martin Street Raleigh, N. C. i j.- j. Cl. Mattel. Apnl j f. t.ie Fust Office in Raleigh, j . , ' i > . r,;i 'lflriCT the Act Os . ii ; 'i iON it Arts. s;,, XI Mil..- tit O V - , ’* SO P,4V.iM.' \u fVIVHCUT' all : Hu- _ imi'm-.i'ioi't end niju-'e ah cheeks wo 1,,,! I United NcwspoeelS. f U ! '. j • .rde.-s uava?le to THE CARO J S i ; ... v- me N"\v Vork u ' i Advi-'-»tsinr Represental-ve .... tihei of the Associated Ntt'o j p . md the United Press Photo) Set i «•* p l{. JEKVAY. Publisher Tv, Publish?! is not responsible for --Vi v .if unsolicited news, oic »,iiPS »r advertising copy unless ne.:- cv no-'a r accompanies the coov 0 ,i. t",pressed by columnists m | *i . newsnaixu do not nec*’ssa.'t , “ i ■, - -n- tvilh’V ot *liis oarer G&W SEVEN PINT •;rv r N STAR BLENDED WHISKEY, 7:i PfOOf ’j STRAIGHT WrilmfY 6 v;."?S Ok MORE oto. WAU GRAIN t’UITRAL SPIRITS. GOODCRHAM 1 WORTS LTD. PIORiA. ILL •iiflWik FOR CHRISTMAS PAY WEEKLY lT ' s EASV Tf > pay LADIES SUITS * COATS • HATS m COATS 8 DRESSES GIRLS COATS AND DRESSES MEN’S SUITS TOPCOATS ’ SLACKS AID HATS BOYS SUITS AND COATS The Best Credit Clothiers In Town i i i—■ mi «■■■.»■ 1..11. ■ ■»-wir»m»rwnirniirf—TirnrTWirr-TffiT-fnarimMW— o. K. CLOTHING CO. 113 E. MARTIN STREET sity as a testing center for these examinations will give prospective teachers in this area an opportuni ty to compare their performance on the examinations with approxi mately 10,000 candidates through out the country who will be parti - cipating in the nationwide admini stration on February 7, 1939, Dr. Nelson H. Harris said. At the one-day testing ses sion a candidate may take the Common Examinations, which include tests In Professional Information, Genera! Culture, English Expression, and Non- Verbal reasoning. In addition, each candidate may take one or two of the eleven Optional Examinations which are de- Mrs. Dorothy Hardy. Goldsooro, and Mrs. W. G Keyes, New Bern. Mr. C L. Blake. West Charlotte High is representative from the de partment of secondary school prin cipals. The NCASC is marie up of eigh ty secondary schools throughout the state. It is an active member of the Nalionai Association of Stu dent Councils. Hampton Haywood will repre sent his association in February at the Student Burgesses, at. Colon ial Williamsburg. The theme for the conference is "Individual Free dom: A Challenge To Ail Nations” This conference will be attended by a representative from each state of the U. S. A. and the follow ing countries: Argebtiba. Brazil. Ceylon, Denmark, Egypt, Ethiopia. Finland. France. Germany. Chan?, Greece Iceland, India, Indonesia. !- ran. Israel. Italy, Japan and Jordan. Other countries to be represent ed are: Korea, Lebanon, Malaya, Morocco. Nigeria. Novway. Paks ■ sian. Philippines, Sudan, Thailand. Turkey, Union of South Africa. U nited Kingdom, Viet Nam and Yu goslavia. BLAST IKE FOJR STAND ON EIGHTS (CONTINUED FROM 1* 1 ' l I > fieials stood up courageously a gainst the latest attempt to wary our government into a totalitari an system in which people and their local governments every where are answerable in every thing to a centralized bureaucra cy. You have seen fit to, call their actions ‘reprehensible "The reprehensible kind of thing' which you talk about— widespread disregard for the Jaw of the land really is happening. . : in Alabama. It is in the signed to demonstrate mastery of subject matter Iri the fields in which he may be assigned to teach Applications- for the examina tions and a Bulletin of Information describing registration procedures and containing sample test questions may be obtained from Dr, Nelson H. Harris, West Campus. Shaw U niversity or directly from the Na tional Teachers Examinations, Ed ucational Testing Service, 20 Nas sau Street, Princeton, Now Jersey. Prospective teachers planning to take the test should secure an Ap plication Blank and a Bulletin ot Information, Nelson H. Harris ad vised. ! District of Columbia. There the j Supreme Court has arrogated to | itself the shaping of national pol ! icy and the decreeing of law by ' its whim the radicals in Congress arc abandoning principles to court the vote of left-wing mi norities; and you are slavishly serving as an errand boy for both of those branches of government rather than acting as a check on them as the Constitution com mands. "American people, if they were asked to list “represensible" ac tions in the nation’s history, would place at the very top much of your own conduct, such as send | ins elite troops to occupy an A | merican city and bayonet, its eiti ! zens. and your denouncing radi cals in political speeches but- In i viting them into the White House i to advise you, as you did on June 123 when you conferred with an NAACF delegation the members i of which have scores of citation.- of Communist front affiliations. IK LAN wants' TO BUILD NEAR SCHOOL U’OVjtnuto ikum met » o' the Atlanta School Board could not predict immediately whether education officials would pint si. :NE\V BID FOR TRIAL DENIED JOHN KASPER (CONTINUED 1-ROM PAGE D Kasper was represented at the trial by four attorneys, headed by RauUton School field, former Hamilton Coun ty Criminal Court judge who | was impeached last spring, j The inciting to riot charge grew lout of disturbances attending in tegration of the first grades of city schools Under a court-ap proved grade a year plan, the city's first and second grades are now desegrafed, BUS CASE IN TENN. must BE HEARS) {CONTINUED I ROM I’AC I i) fact that Ev y'sreanrJjsnX fact that Evers "may have beard ed this particular bus for the pur pose of instituting litigation is not significant.” It said the circumstances of the case clearly clamonstruAed that Evers actually had a legal con troversy with the state law. It said that Evers, in an order to show the existence of an “actual controversy” with the law, did not have to keep riding the buses Indefinitely or become a regular passen ger. Citing its 1956 decision out lawing segregation on the busts '< of Montgomery, Ala., the high | court said: - “A resident of a municipality j who cannot use transportation ; facilities therein without being I subjected by statue to special dts | abilities necessarily has. we think, ! a substantial, immediate and real ! interest in the validity of the sta j ute which imposes the disability.*' NEW SCHOOL COMMITTEE ORGANIZED (CONTINUED FROM PAOI I) “We affirm our determined sup* \ port for free public education for I every child in Virginia," the state- j rnenfc said. “We believe that this | should continue to be guaranteed! Chur J Bonus Money Rules Ail purchase slips oi receipt* pi-e-ented uj »our chared muw tome iron, stores advertising In the C AUGUMAN Eseh week carries $ dale in fio bonus Money period Purchase* aliKihle must come from the store during the week the aci" appears. No purchase sltpi. representing a Itiisint ss should be submitted All receipt! must come from individual purchases AH churches tn Kaletgh and Wake County air eligible All purchase *!tps must beer tue name or the stove from wiucb tne .sue ch*w wan made AH purchase shun should or .niiuultKd in the name of the church, and should he in the office of the CAROLINIAN the M«odav following close of Bonus period 111 order that smaller churches may nave so equai upont tumty to share tr the Bonus Money the following regulation is expedient No vnurch >1 ever tOO member- will s* awarded Ist E-nns Money consecutively i e shuu cl a church of tOO or more member* iiooive Ist Bonn* Money aftei the first per mo. it would huve to wait until the third Bonus period to lie presented Ist iwan *g»m. except where •> church has *v or less members, then it couid win i-.tr Bonus award* consecutively Howevc-t this does nut mrar, that second .md third awards cannot be sought cons-cutivelv CmtseeuenHv every ehumh crow has he opportunity to secure an award every period No piirce.ise nf over SSNI from *nv one merchant tliirhu: a ivr-ok ran e« roue ted There Is a celling of Sls per person a week tor groeery pun buses. In the event of tin same amount ot purchases by more than one entry the award will be divided Weekly purrhe.se totals should he shown on each packet met total piared on ihe outside of the envelope can-vine the period's entry along with name and add -ess Bonus untilrv earners will he annoiinred in the issue tollowtne me elosinr it ■ |i period dh entries reoiaili Che properly of rbe ( ftnoUMlk \h tallying Is liimi when the names of tit*- Bonus Money earners ire an nounscd m Tin- I AKOMNIAfV. and no responsibility Is aereiiied bv this news iiapri beyond Hint point. No rereipi* from banns will be considered encrpt pay meat on mortgage* by the Constitution of Virginia ! Some of the group’s organizers attended the first meeting of the Virginia Committe To Preserve j Public Schools Saturday and said i at that time they planned to form iv local group. Meantime, Dr. J. L. Blair Buck coordinator of the state commit- j tec, said membership was growing j quickly. The Norfolk affiliate now numbers about 7,000, he said. JANITOR IS IMPLICATED IN THEFT (CONTINUED FROM I’M.I I) “cleaning up" last Saturday. Authorities said about 55.000 was recovered from Martin's hotel room in Hickory. But Martin, who was charged i with einbez:/ ..‘merit,. said he had given the rest of the money to a j woman he identified •as Ethel I Carlton. The FBI declined to re-, veal whether the rest of the men- ! ey had been recovered with the arrest of Miss Carlton. The woman was arraigned be fore U. C. Commissioner Clarence j Clapp at Newton and held today! in lieu ol $7.500 bond. Roy K, Moore, special agent in charge of j the FBI office at Charlotte, said the pair will be tried in U. S. Fed- j ! eral Court at Statesville. LECTURE AM) FINES GIVEN NO HOAXERS (CONTINUED FROM t’AUt 11 less than 24 hours after point received an anonymous tele phone tip that a bomb had been planted in the school. O liceis found a harmless dam- 'j my bomb in a luckcr at the school. I Judge Winfred Smith warned i j the youths that the incident was j • serious and threatened them with I much sterner punishment if there) I was a recurrance of the "bomb i | scare." ! REVrSHIRLEY" ! RESIGNS FROM DAVIE STREET (CONTINUED FROM CAGE 1) i Previous pastors of the church 'irave been the Revs. C Andre! 5 Kearns. William Gillespie, A.. S.; powe and Dl. .1 W Smith. Sr FIFTH ROM S MONEY WEEK IS UNDERWAY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE It point someone to collect the pur chase slips or receipts submitted ay t it- members of the churches ail week Only those purchase slips for merchandise boegtit from CARO LINIA.N advertisers will be count- I r-d. A list of advertisers appears j on the front page of each edition : Contest rules are listed on page : * caca week. You ,tu- u.-'k- d to s,ste ~jf*m care-'ulty. ** Awards .for Bonus Money o r: AO, first; $25. second; SLY third; j and $lO, fourth. 6 ESCAPED I PRISONERS RECAPTUED (< ONTiM'KO I RUM PA. !. )i ; nightwatchman W. H. P.m eu : left him bound and inwe.i in o' | linen closet and fled from the j i jail. Pridgeon worked the sag loose, however, arid shouted to other prisoners who set fin to a sheet and hung it out a nindow to attract attention. Nearby police saw the burning sheet, freed Pridgen ami be gan a search for the fugitives. , Herman Pittman, Jr. of Wilson , walked into the police station and i sun-ended Monday. Officers later j ; captured Joe Addison. Lucama; j i Leroy Allen. Philadelphia: Willie j i Barries. Wilson; James V-c Wal-j ion. Frcemonr. :and Henry Greer, ! ; Wilson. CONFESSES | MURDERS OF 12 SISTERS (CwNTINUTD FROM i‘VGE 1) | a sister of the two victims, and thr two men are first cousins. Rumple quoted the confessed j killer as saying he was “very friendly" with the 16-yeer-old girt; | but "didn't have nothing to do j j with the other.” i There were no eyewitnesses to; ! the shooting but Mrs. Chambers) j told officers she saw Willie run from the room with a pistol in his j hand after she heard “tv lot of lour noises.” She said Lucille followed j Willie out, of the room and fell j dead at the front door. She had) four .22 caliber slugs in her. The other sister was found sprawled i on the bedroom floor and was | dead on arrival at a local hospi- j I Lai, She was shot once. Chambers aid he fieri after the shooting and walked more 1 than five miles in stocking feet afiet (aking off his shoes i to cross ;» creek. His feet be i came swollen and be still was j unable to wear shoes at the , White Christmas Pageant At First Baptist Church Sunday A White Christmas Pageant will j be presented at the First Baptist Church or Wilmington Street. Sun - , day at 7:30 p m. under the (lin-et ion of Mesdames Ruby S. Mi-Kin- i ney. Minolta B. Eaton, and Marjo- ; rie Williams. Choirs participating In the pa- | want are the Moseley-Jones, Sen- ' ior. Junior, and the Tot Choirs. j Narrator will be Hubert Ellis, j Mrs E. Mae Kelly will serve ns | minister of music Members participating in the Man Shoots Married Girl Friend; Found Woman & Hubby Together Find Body Os Girl, 10, In Pa. Church Gutted By Fire PHILADELPHIA lANPI -Twen- ! i v-four hours after the Church of | the Lord Jesus Christ of tiie Aoo- ’ stolic Faith, Inc., had been gutted j by fire, the body of a 10-year-old | gri! was found in the smouldering j ruins. The girl. Betty \nn Me- ; Dowell, w-j-- discovered in a restroom where she apparent ly succumbed from smoke in halation. The gir! was among 1500 worshippers attending service when fire broke out unday morning. Just before she blaze she left the main au ditorium and was not seen nn j 111 the next day when firemen .recovered her body. Tiie flaming church threatened j some VI homes nearby and so com- ', S'Mely was the wooden interior j gutted that supporting rafters gave j way and the steeple toppled to the j -'-ound Tito walls also gnve way.: The fire was believed to bar e started in the Sunday School ErfucatbMi, Not Profitable, TV Lands Wsman U Tails Os Law STATE COLLEGE ANSWERS HU. QUESTION: How dues Ihis n>-v quality index” developed by to bacco research workers to evaluate leaf quality work'.’ ANSWER: The physical char.,?- 'Juristic?; of the h-as are listed, These indude such things as color, size, body, texture, maturity, phy iral Intactness and cutting qu m y. Then each of these characteristics ery scored, and the total points for ath variety averaged. The result '-ig score gives the workers their lualliv index. QUESTION: flow is the be-t way to store an irrigation system or the winter? ANSWER: The iv.-mato-i pum.i: riiould be cleaned and lubricated Dr. Goode Honorary Member Os A Society TALLAHASSEE Dr. H. D Goode was made a Honorary mem ber of the Kappa lota Chapter of the Alpha Kappa Mu National Honor Society during the annual tapping exercises held here in Lee Hail recently. The prominent Pensacola dentist ejui national president of the Flor ida AcfeM University Nation::! Alumni Association was inducted dong with seven other students of Florida A&M. Students tapped ’-‘.ere Edith Bou-er.-:. Panama City; Marvin Davies. Aloe Freeman. Miami: Theodore Huntm-. Jack-mm ill-'; Ma,. F. Triplet-. Tallaha:-.-'<• Al - Pinkston. O'da: and Ihoo di-.-q Ruse Or'andu, Dr. Joseph H licasor. director of libraries. Howard tlniversity, told his audience that “we need to look mor«’ to the finer values of life and not devoir too tmit-u at time of his arrest Saturday, Temperatures dipped well be low freezing in Ihr area Iri day night. The sheriff raid Chambers was being held In the county jail With out bond. State Briefs (CONTINUED runs; I'AC! n flora the waist down anti to g;t an ambulance. When the youths returned to the ycene, a truck, driven by.Thomas F. Bowers o( Florida - they tried to stop the truck by blinking their lights - was approaching. Bowers did not roe Apple-white until he was ;d --nmst on him. it was reported He allegedly tried to avoid hitt ing the man. bus 1•; truck v.dic-I hit Applewhite killing him in stantly HACK’'!) tVI It! AN A\F JR-U.ETGH The condition nf F u-i T. Mm an of 754 Fayetteville Street, who was reportedly hocked unconscious with an axe swims by his step-father Saturday morning, was reported as “satisfactory” by authorities t St. Agnes Hospital. Raleirh officers L. C. Puryear and A. K Morris found the 21-year fT r-,** —r« 7 ■*♦-'*-* f* r>P WIM *, illft •*« «b WS »^A*./*cU at 341 W, South Street, the home ot bis parents. Morgan's stepfather, O tis Locklear. 32. was arrested for assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill and was placed in the Wake County .led) The run said He attacked his step-son aft"r he v-ns awakened b’■ sounds of his wife strinryhng and saw Morgan choking her. <-.ist include: Wliiians Robertson as Joseph, Ilevmes.se Perry as Mary, Rev. J. A. Lester as Ga briel, Kinluw Patterson as the ii/.ibelh: l>. It. Ingram, Joseph prophet, Mrs. Ida Colson a.« E- Uobinson, ami Frank Hinton as the three wise men; Charlsea Morgan and Connie Davenport as angels: Delma Hall and Edward Thorpe as heralds: Gloria Lotta, Mrs. Irene Marrow. Edna Rich ards, Klvera tjuiek. Ann Morg- department. It 'v.i> so intense ! and spreaded so rapidly that Bishop S. C. Johnson, the pas tor, told newsmen that "sonic - one must have started the fire.' Police were immediately sum > moned to the scene to investi- ■ gate the possibility of arson The church was sold to Bishop Johnson’s congregation in 1947 for R 105.000 by the- Bethany Collegiate ! Presbyterian Church, one of the | largest in the United States. Its ! j furnishings included a $25,000 or gan presented by John Wanamak i cr’s son. Rodman, in 1925. Also, j close to $200,000 worth of modern i radio sending and receiving eqttip -1 moot including broadcasting ! booths, offices and cutting rooms. Following his accusation to news* ! men. B’ hop Johnson refused to I make further public comment a- I bout the fir >. He has been sum* j moned to the fire marshal’s office io “discuss trie fire.” 1 Warn parts should be replaced. Jr | .ation pip-.s need not be placed ; under a shelter, but should have I adequate supports to prevent sag | ring. Removable rubber sea! gas j kets on irrigation pipes should be I cleaned of all mud and dirt. The | sprinkler head should he cleaned l and checked tor wear and amage. | Unless the sprinkler head has a ; lubricating fitting, il should never t be greased or oiled. ; The sprinklers I .no made of rust-resisting material, i and oil or grease will cause the i prinkk-r head to work improper i ’ QUESTION: What per cent of . No th Carolina's commercial forest j land is in smalt tracts? ANSWER: Eighty-four per cent. : tension and time to the pi-actiont - things of lif-.-." He was introduced by Mr:-. L B. Clarke of the A&M mathematics department. The tap ping ceremony find charge were marie by Mrs. Carrie P. Davis, also of Fr.i-idr, A&M. The boner citation was giv en to sti.id“J»ts who made an average of 3.3 or above during the .second semester by Lucius Wyatt. Student Council presi dent Clifford Taylor led de votions and Mrs. George W. Gore, .Tr.. and Mrs. M. Sanders s-iß«r the Aloha Kappa Mu hvwn, The i .■ r; f. r an organization glv i :Uoe to i-oilcciate men •od v-wiv-n of superior scholastic attainments originated with Dr. (ieo. ■ ■ W Core. Jr . during the time he was dean of Tennessee A .ricuHurn! and Industrial State ; College As an outgrowth of his -•yinsorsbip experiences with the | Phi tv-la Tan Honor Society hr nercoived the need for coordinat ing and cot'soiidating the efforts of the several institutions then ope* . I rating honor societies. ’ His proposal to the represent atives of five interested schools, namely West Virginia Stall* Col i i- ,r, 'North Carolina Agricultural nri Technical College, Tuskegee Institute. B' liedl. t. College, and the •>-.rt institution. Tennessee Aericul - tr.iral and Industrial Stale College, eliminated in the founding of a I national collegiate honor society J with the rather * r f*. deration of Scholastic Honor j Soviet i the predecessor of Alpha | Mu Honor Socb-tv. In the •.-”(> years following this | India l convention in 1037 the scope ! ;m«i identity were expanded and i clarified to encompass a permanent l nation;', 1 honor society e.tulcr trie i now f -miliar title of Alpha Kappa Mu Honor Society. The purposes : of the .society were formalized in i the constitution to rend as follows: "to promote high scholarship: to eneoura ««• sincere and zealous en deavor in all fields of knowledge nnd service: to cultivate a high order of personal living: and to de velop an appreciation for scholar ly work arid scholarly endeavor in others. ’’ Aloha TC;*iaj>a g&u has won rat ional acclaim by being listed in rinird'.? Manual, the official Blue Books for American Fraterltie.s and Sororities. since 1948; in 1952. it was officially admitted to mem bership bv the National Associa ! *ion of College Honor Societies. [ No better evidence of the accept ance and appreciation of the worth I and value of this organization , an, Muttra Lot) a and Mrs. Roger Evans as the nations Os the world; Sylvester White, C. A. Langston, and Walter Davis as shepherds. The altar will be decorated ap propriately for the Christmas sto ry by Mesdsmos Ruby S. McKin ney. Ann Hurdle, Catherine Wint ers, Mineta B. Eaton, Miss Marjo rie Williams, and Messrs. William Taylor. C. A, Langston. D. R. In ! gram, and Frank Hinton. 1 The public is cordially invited. TOLEDO O. (ANPi A suitor who objected tp the attent- : ion a woman showed her estranged ! husband, shot, and wounded tin woman when he found them seat- j ed in a parked ear last week. Mrs. Dolores Stewart, 21;, was j wounded in the shoulder and was ! given hospital treatment, Horace Newton. 41, police said, j came upon Mrs. Stewart and hw husband. MarwtHes, from whom ' she v.vs separated, while they wer<» i in his auto. Newton Led several shots, one of which struck the wo- j man. Newton was charged with shoot- j ing with inlcnt to kill Youth Who Kidnaped Dab Driver, Boy, Sentenced To Eighteen Yrs- BRIDGEPORT, Conn < ANPi A Negro youth who took a boy hostage and led state police on a wild chase in September was sen tenced to 5 to 18 years in prison 1 last week James Leroy Smith, 20, pleaded . guilty to kidnaping. He was ,o - rested Sept. 2, after he forced a i '■ah driver at gunpoint to drive him to Connecticut. N. C. Elks’ Ant’ ered Guard In Rocky Mt. Convention BY J. B. HARREN ROCKY MOUNT -- Contingent; ; of the North Carolina Antler-•; Guard Department of trie Improv- j d Benevolent Protective Ordm ol Elks of the World (IBPOEW* re- ; presenting Wilson. Tar boro. Green- f vilie. New Bern. Kinston and Roc ky Mount, gathered h< re Novem- . bur 24th fin a region'll assembly called by Brigadier Genera'. Letoy ; Barnes of Greenville. Following a religions pro gram at Mt. Carmel Baptist Church where the Rev. Willie IC. Battle, pastor, preached a sermon taking the lead in meeting the social problems of could be provided than its growth in the twenty-year span of its t existance from five original sirag- \ gling but inspired groups to the i sixty, vigorous, and respected j chapters that have admitted as of j this date nearly five thousand per- ; sons to membership in this esteem- j od soceity of scholars. MUS. W. W. LEWIS, Manager announces OPEN HOUSE FOR .. . FULLER PRODUCTS December 18, 19 and 29, 1958 Thurs. 9 a.m. to 5 s.m.—Fri. A Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 902 S. BLOUNT ST. 24 HOUR LAUNDROMAT SERVICE .New, Modern Heating System Just: installed. Building Warm 2 i Hours A Day! DAVIE STREET COIN LAUNDROMAT NEXT TO RALEIGH SEAFOOD MARKET BEEFEATER Mrl IB 'J***'. tV, t 5 ■ - ' K \ ■\ '' ,EE f dflfeu S£T!O W,g I A \J in™ tfig-XSlx „ BEEFEATER ggyf GIN IMPORTED FROM ENGLAND BY KORRAND CORPORATION, NFW YORK 1. JO. 94 PROOF * 300?4 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS Russia Is Topic Used By Kocp Aside from her military progn Russia iii trying to get ahead • nominally and in government < i free countries in Asia and Afrii Air. T. V, Koop, director of C News and Public Affairs in W.r ini’ton. D. C. told Shaw Un'.vcr students and faculty Friday. Mr. Koop spoke or. “Internal;.'- ai Affairs" and stated that Rns-a is constantly trying to keen Western World off bain be mentioned Nasser’s turn of Hi ion ss toward the we : as one le ; fill phase. Discussing the East Berlin Valuation, lie pointed on! lb.it. if we give m to Russia's pro position, v c lose face with the rest of the \\ ."hi and if we <l<> not, we fare war, which is net | .i very hunnv picture. However, our government feels tint Bus sia does not want war. hut -be will do everythin slv-t of war in an effon to keep A merica off balance, Ho felt thill 1 eventual hop s lof getting together with Russia ! '. rU be in the education;'! proves.-. ! there, as the Russian people with ; -.ducatiatl can foro. their own opiu [ ions. ; In eoncJr.si.s, Mi Koop said th"'. ias a Godless Country. Ru , c n ■ rover match Amei'icn. vvi.'t r'ioca- I 'ion. patriotism. i'orv. a r; looks fir,d j spiritual values which includes I Utith. vc can develop and maintain ! a free world. At the Greenwich toll barrier of the Merritt • Parkway. So, lit 4 look a school-boy hostage and ltd police a wild chase up the park way. The boy was unharmed when Smith was captured. Smith told the police at the to a of bis arrest that hi •■•'.w mi way to kill his cstriin:a' i v ilc. \t the time of his capture v . - armed with a .22 on hi* i ijfjic the day, the guardsmen ur 1 women > retired to the Tw: i County' IfSPQEtV io igc ho- • ; where a delightful dinner v:• served before the Guard <n dispersed to their homes. | Rev. Mr. BaHic. himself ;m K : urged the audience to "V ’kr i I ,-ct up, get out and do sum. j to make the world know that £)»• j is something in us." j Lieut Commander Queen H: th . Batten, Ut. Ruler Sadie Hobi s j the local Mi/.pnh Temple, a !•>••• .A-i t h F. xaited Ruler < n-l.m j Whitaker of Twin County Loe ! wore official hosts to the guard i men Assisting guardsmen Bain- - and j Batten woe Major Dorothy Ba.n ; Greenville, and Col. F«od Jon i Kinston. | Sudden changes in a cow's daily ; routine may upset milk produc j tion. | Clean sol added to pig pens each day will prevent anemia.
The Carolinian (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Dec. 20, 1958, edition 1
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